Web Release Date: February 10,
Structure-Activity-Stability Relationships of Pt-Co Alloy Electrocatalysts in Gas-Diffusion Electrode Layers


and
Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, University of Houston, Houston, Texas 77204-4004 and Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Laboratory, Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, Menlo Park, California 94025
Received: November 3, 2006
In Final Form: December 22, 2006
Abstract:
We establish relationships between the atomic structure, composition, electrocatalytic activity, and
electrochemical corrosion stability of carbon-supported Pt-Co alloy nanoparticles in electrode catalyst layers.
These Pt-Co catalysts have received much attention for use as cathode layers in polymer electrolyte membrane
fuel cells (PEMFCs) because of their favorable oxygen-reduction-reaction (ORR) activity and suspected
corrosion stability. We reported an enhancement of activity of low-temperature Pt50Co50 of 3 times that of
pure carbon supported Pt catalysts. The use of synchrotron X-ray diffraction has enabled structural
characterization of the alloy nanoparticles both before and, importantly, after electrocatalysis under fuel cell
like conditions. From this, a detailed picture of the relative activity and stability of Pt-Co alloy phases as a
function of synthesis conditions has emerged. We have investigated the structure, composition, chemical
ordering, and concentration of Pt-Co alloy phases in (i) a dry, freshly synthesized nanoparticle catalyst, (ii)
the catalytic electrode layer in a proton-conducting polymer electrolyte before electrocatalytic activity, and
(iii) the same electrode layer after electrocatalytic activity. We find that Pt50Co50 catalysts annealed at 600
C
consist of multiple phases: a chemically ordered face-centered tetragonal (fct) and two chemically disordered
face-centered cubic (fcc) phases with differing stoichiometries. The Co-rich fcc phase suffers from corrosive
Co loss during the preparation of conducting polymer electrode layers and, more significantly, during the
ORR electrocatalysis. Most importantly, these fcc phases exhibit high catalytic activities for ORR (about 3×
compared to a pure Pt electrocatalyst). Pt50Co50 catalysts annealed at 950
C consist mainly of the fct
Pt50Co50 phase. This phase shows favorable stability to corrosion in the conducting polymer electrode and
during electrocatalysis, as the relative intensities of fcc(111)/fct(101) peak ratio remained consistently around
0.5 before and after preparation of conducting polymer electrode layers and before and after electrochemical
measurements; however, it exhibits a lower catalytic ORR activity compared to the low-temperature fcc alloy
phases (about 2.5× compared to a pure Pt electrocatalyst). Our results demonstrate the complexity in these
multiphase materials with respect to catalyst activity and degradation. By understanding of the relationships
between crystallographic phase, chemical ordering, composition, and the resulting electrochemical activity
and corrosion stability of fuel cell catalysts within polymer-electrolyte/catalyst composites, we can move
toward the rational design of active and durable catalyst materials for PEMFC electrodes.
Download the full text: PDF | HTML